Communications

Nokia Phones Go to Natural Language Class

Nokia and MIT researchers are teaching cell phones to take commands in natural language.

  • Thursday, April 27, 2006
  • By Katherine Bourzac

As part of a research collaboration with MIT computer scientists, the Nokia Research Center Cambridge, in Cambridge MA, is developing cell phones that can understand and respond to written commands typed in English.

Using the MobileStart system on the phone on the right, you can remind your mother to take her medication. The phone on the left shows a new calendar event created in "mom's" phone by MobileStart. (Courtesy of Boris Katz and Federico Mora, MIT.)

Robert Iannucci, head of Nokia's research centers, says the company wants to transform phones from simple calling terminals to "information gateways" -- to the Internet, GPS and sensors, MP3s, desktop computers, iPods, and other devices. And, he says, that requires rethinking the entire interface between people and handhelds. For both Nokia and MIT, that means using text interaction.

"Humans are good with language," says Boris Katz, lead research scientist at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, the principle group working with Nokia. "We want language to be a first-rate citizen" on cell phones, he says.

Natural language navigation systems have been long on promise and short on delivery. But it's no longer unrealistic to think these systems may be in the hands -- and handsets -- of consumers in the near future. One caveat: the complex underpinnings of these new applications and the algorithms that parse language will have to be hidden from cell-phone users -- lest they get frustrated navigating through layers of menus.

Advertisement

To power Nokia's natural language technology, MIT's Katz is using a software system he developed in 1993 called Start, which interprets human questions and finds answers using websites such as the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) and Mapquest. Using the Web version of Start as a base, Katz is currently working with the Nokia center to develop a mobile version of the software for cell phones, called MobileStart.

Here's how the Web version of Start works: users type a question into a text field. The software interprets the query, decides where to seek the answer (in its database or on another website), and responds with a written explanation, a link to a website, or an image.

[click here for examples of text processing on a cell phone.]

"Start extracts answers, not hits," says Katz, because it interprets human language, rather than looking for keywords, like Google and other search engines.

The Start system understands English sentences by breaking them down into a series of relationships between object, property, and value. For instance, if one types, "What is the population of Iraq?", Start interprets the query: the object is Iraq, the property is population, and the value is what Start seeks.

That's straightforward; however, people tend to ask more complex questions, particularly if they're looking for specific information. If a person asks a question such as, "How many people live in the capital of the third-largest country in Asia?" Start will break it down into three separate queries to process one at a time: What is the third-largest country in Asia, what is that country's capital, and what is the population of the capital? (Start decides how to break up questions and how to prioritize its evaluations using an algorithm Katz designed.)

Print

Related Articles

A Self-Writing To-Do List

New online schedulers rely on natural-language processing to get you organized.

Intelligent, Chatty Machines

A startup hopes to help computers have meaningful conversations with people.

Computers That Speak Your Language

Voice recognition that finally holds up its end of a conversation is revolutionizing customer service. Now the goal is to make natural language the way to find any type of information, anywhere.

Close Comments

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

Guest (alokmohan)

  • 2120 Days Ago
  • 04/27/2006

nokia phones

Revolution in telephones.Long to see in India.

Reply

Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Can We Build Tomorrow's Breakthroughs?

Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

eSolar

First Solar

Lattice Power

Ushahidi

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement